“One of the many lessons which people might take from
this Mohammed cartoon episode is that if they want the uncensored truth
about a matter of genuine controversy they are better off scrolling the
internet – tomgrossmedia.com and Wikipedia – than buying any
British newspaper”-- Dominic Lawson, former editor-in-chief of the Sunday
Telegraph, writing in his column in the (London) Independent

“See Tom Gross’s site for the outrageous cartoons
satirizing the Holocaust. But where are the synod [of the Church of England]’s
protests about them?” -- Times of London Religion correspondent Ruth Gledhill,
writing on The Times’s website

“People around the world might be more mindful of
Muslim sensibilities if the Muslim world did not itself slander other religions,
as Tom Gross points out in The Jerusalem Post”-- The influential British news magazine, The Week

“This superb piece by Tom Gross in The Jerusalem Post
exposes the hypocrisy in the cartoon row. Read the whole thing, as they
say”-- Stephen Pollard, writer for The Daily Mail and The
Times of London, on his blog

“As violent complaints are made about Danish cartoons,
Tom Gross offers us a reminder of the kind of anti-Semitic images that rarely
cause a stir in the Arab world”-- Clive Davis, writer and critic for The Times of
London, on his blog

“Tom Gross hits just the right note in The Jerusalem
Post. This is about massive, grotesque hypocrisy”-- Richard Landes, on the Augean Stables

To be or not to be

The famous question has never seemed more timely

The “Mohammed” cartoons
as they appeared in the Danish
newspaper Jyllands Posten

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

“To be or not to be” – the line Shakespeare put in the
mouth of literature’s most famous Dane, Hamlet – is perhaps
the question the whole free world should now be asking about the long-term
future of freedoms we take for granted. The violent protests over mildly
satirical cartoons about the prophet Mohammed, published in an obscure Danish
newspaper over half a year earlier, resulted in over 200 deaths worldwide
in February 2006.

In this op-ed from The Jerusalem Post, I ask whether circulating a repulsive
cartoon of Anne Frank in bed with Hitler, as Belgian and Dutch Muslims did,
or publishing an ugly caricature of a hooked-nosed Ehud Olmert, as Britain’s
widely-read “Muslim Weekly” did a few days later, is really
the best way for European Muslims to engender sympathy among their non-Muslim
neighbors over their hurt feelings about the Danish cartoons.

To see some of the cartoons I refer to in the article, please click on
this
webpage. The page was subsequently recommended by Time magazine and
several other leading international publications, as a counterpoint to Muslim
protests about the satirical cartoons of Mohammed in Denmark. It was also
linked to by over 1000 blogs around the world.

Worse cartoons were to come, as the Iranian regime announced that it would
hold a contest to find the “best” Holocaust denial cartoons
from the Islamic world. Iran’s anti-Semitic president has already
denied that the slaughter of 6 million European Jews took place. His government
is actively attempting to acquire nuclear weapons and he has publicly stated
more than once that he wishes to wipe out the Jews of Israel.

-- Tom Gross

THE ARTICLE: “TO BE OR NOT TO BE”

THERE is a strong case for
saying that the Danish cartoons of Mohammed, which have caused so much uproar,
are fair comment. Certainly those who haven’t seen them can rest assured
that they are relatively tame in comparison with many cartoons on other
subjects which regularly appear in the European press. Even so, non-Muslims
might have more sympathy with Muslims who find them offensive, if it weren’t
for the astonishing double standards and hypocrisy of the Muslim world when
it comes to accepting and applauding truly vicious slanders against Jews,
and to a lesser extent Christians.

The most controversial of the
12 cartoons: Mohammed with
a fuse sticking out of his turban

The arguments from Muslims – though not the fanatical, violent manner
of many of their protests – would no doubt be taken more seriously
if they had also objected to the depiction on Syrian television of rabbis
as cannibals. Or if last Saturday, Britain’s Muslim Weekly had not
published a caricature of a hooked-nosed Ehud Olmert.

Or if last Friday, “Valley of the Wolves,” the most expensive
movie ever made in Turkey, had not opened to great local acclaim. In the
film, American soldiers in Iraq crash a wedding and pump a little boy full
of lead in front of his mother. They kill dozens of innocent people with
random machine gun-fire, shoot the groom in the head, and drag those left
alive to prison, where a Jewish doctor cuts out their organs, and sells
them to rich clients in New York, London and Tel Aviv.

Or if a Belgian and Dutch Muslim group hadn’t last week posted on
its website pictures of Anne Frank in bed with Hitler. Or if the mere display
of a cross or a Star of David in Saudi Arabia wasn’t illegal.

SO MUCH FOR RELIGIOUS RESPECT

“Valley of the Wolves,” the most
expensive
movie ever made in Turkey, depicts a Jewish
doctor cutting out human organs to sell to rich
clients in New York, London and Tel Aviv

And when it comes to newspaper cartoons – the subject of the present
unrest – Muslim countries are world leaders in stirring up hate, without
a peep of protest elsewhere, let alone the torching of buildings, threats
to behead European tourists, and the burning of the Danish flag (which incidentally
bears a Christian symbol, the cross). So much for religious respect.

The cartoons published last September in Jyllands Posten, a paper that
hardly anyone outside Denmark, one of Europe’s smallest countries,
had ever heard of, are mild when compared to cartoons routinely produced
about Jews in the countries where some of the worst anti-Danish protests
are now being staged.

Arabic Jew-baiting is not – as Israel’s enemies in the West
often try to argue – limited to political attacks on Zionism. They
are directed against Jews in general, and are as loathsome and dehumanizing
as those produced under the Nazis.

A repugnant cartoon by a Belgian and Dutch
Muslim group: Anne Frank in bed with Hitler

We might expect such demonic images from a country led by a Holocaust-denier
like Iran, or a rogue regime like Syria. But these vile images are to be
found in the media of supposedly moderate, pro-Western states like Jordan,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain and Egypt.

BLACK-HATTED JEWS SPITTING AND SWEATING

Al-Watan (Oman) has run Nazi-type caricatures of Jews with hooked noses
and hunched backs, not wearing shoes, and sweating profusely.

Akhbar Al-Khalij (Bahrain) has shown anti-Semitic caricatures of black-hatted
Jews spitting and sweating as they manipulate America to do their bidding.

Al Ahram, one of Egypt’s leading dailies, has published cartoons
of Jews laughing while they drink blood. (The U.S. senate has approved a
$1.84 billion aid package for Egypt for 2006, the second highest in the
world.)

The official cartoonist of the Palestinian Authority has portrayed Jews
in the form of snakes, a historic motif of medieval European anti-Semitism.
The PA website has posted cartoons repeating the ancient blood libel that
Jews murder non-Jewish children.

Islamist extremists on the streets of
London held up signs such as these

Some of the cartoons don’t just resemble those published by the Nazis.
They are literally copied from Nazi originals. For instance, a cartoon from
Arab News (an English-language Saudi daily regarded as one of the more moderate
publications in the Arab world), depicts rats wearing Stars of David and
skullcaps, scurrying backwards and forwards through holes in the wall of
a building called “Palestine House.” The imagery used is almost
identical to a well-known scene from the Nazi film “Jew Suess”
– a scene in which Jews are depicted as vermin to be eradicated by
mass extermination.

At other times the Jews are the Nazis. The Jordanian newspaper, Ad-Dustur,
for example, ran a cartoon showing the railroad to the death camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau
– but with Israeli flags replacing the Nazi ones, and a sign which
read “The Israeli Annihilation Camp.” Jordan is supposedly a
moderate country at peace with Israel.

NOR IS JUDAISM SPARED

To mark the UN designation of January 27 as Holocaust memorial day, the
cartoonist for Al-Yawm (Saudi Arabia) superimposed the Nazi swastika on
the Star of David.

Nor is Judaism spared. The Daily Star in Beirut ran a cartoon showing a
large Talmud with a bayonet sticking out of it shooting an elderly man in
Arab headdress who then has red blood gushing out of him. Other Arab cartoons
have shown Jews with money bags, spreading death, terror and disease.

More signs at a radical Muslim demonstration in London,
February 2006

The relatively mild Danish cartoons have been republished in several European
papers so readers can discover what all the fuss is about. (It is hard for
readers to judge the story without seeing them.) But not in papers in Britain
or in any major publications in the US, countries that are now apparently
too intimidated to run the risks that might go with reproducing them.

At the same time, whereas editors from both The Guardian and Independent
in London, for example, have appeared on the BBC saying they wouldn’t
dream of publishing cartoons that Muslims find offensive, these papers have
not hesitated to publish cartoons offensive to Jews (Arab blood being smeared
on the Western Wall in The Guardian, the flesh of Palestinian babies being
eaten by Ariel Sharon in The Independent, and so on.)

JESUS HAVING GAY SEX WITH JUDAS

A western cartoonist on the double
standards of the Muslim world

The New York Times rushed to praise a frivolous Broadway play showing Jesus
having gay sex with Judas, yet hasn’t dared to reproduce a Danish
cartoon making a serious point about the misuse of the teachings of the
prophet Mohammed by Islamist terrorists.

With demonstrators on the streets of London last Friday chanting in unison
“Europe you will pay, your 9/11 is on its way” and holding signs
reading “Behead those who insult Islam,” and “Prepare
for the REAL Holocaust,” it is perhaps not surprising that weak spirits
in the West are cowed.

Yet this is an issue that goes far beyond cartoons, and if they want Western
freedoms to survive, moderate Muslims and non-Muslims alike have to stop
caving into threats. On Sunday, Mark Steyn reminded us of the best-known
words of a famous fictional Dane: “To be or not to be, that is the
question.” Exactly.

(The writer is a former Jerusalem correspondent for the Sunday Telegraph.)